Murder Season

Murder Season by Robert Ellis Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Murder Season by Robert Ellis Read Free Book Online
Authors: Robert Ellis
Tags: Mystery
in the rivalry and had made no attempt to compete with Higgins for his job. Roy Wemer, a deputy DA Lena had worked with over the past few years, once told her that Vaughan would never give up being a prosecutor. In spite of the years he’d put in, in spite of the overwhelming support he would have received from his colleagues, Vaughan still enjoyed presenting a case at trial and working in front of a judge and jury.
    The deputy chief opened a file folder, tossing a photograph on the conference table. Everyone leaned in for a closer look. It was a single frame from the street camera that had picked up Tim Hight driving away from Club 3 AM. Although the image had been taken at night, the clarity was good enough to make an ID. Tim Hight’s face showed clearly through the windshield, looking triumphant and completely mad, along with a dark shape on the passenger seat that could easily have been the murder weapon.
    Ramsey rolled a chair over, turning to Lena as he sat down. “SID has already made a preliminary review of the security tapes from the club,” he said. “Unfortunately, the fire escape is a blind spot. Hight could have been waiting out there all night and never been picked up on camera.”
    Lena thought about the way the building was configured—what the cop with the clipboard had called ass backward. “The fire escape is on the far side of the building,” she said. “Out of the way and facing north.”
    “Exactly. No one can see it from either the street or the parking lot.”
    She looked back at the photograph of Hight in his car. “What about this shape on the passenger seat?”
    “They’re working on it,” Ramsey said. “But don’t get your hopes up. At this point, they think it’s a flashlight.”
    Lena settled back in her chair. Something about the way Bennett and Watson and even Higgins were looking at the photograph bothered her. She wasn’t a mind reader, but she began to get the feeling that they were trying to appear interested. That it required an effort and that they couldn’t quite get there. Bennett’s eyes were emerald green, his body short and stocky. He was old enough have grown up at a time when “supersize me” sounded like free food instead of garbage, but young enough to have two kids in daycare and worries about what he and his wife might do with his career sinking to the bottom of the pool. Watson looked as if she shared the same unnatural lack of concern. She was about Lena’s age, with blond hair and a sleek body hidden beneath her business suit. Every time Lena had ever seen Watson, she was dressed conservatively. Only rumors stood in her wake: rumors of a boob job last year while on vacation, and rumors that she and Bennett were having an affair—one reason among many why they’d lost the Jacob Gant trial and a murderer had walked free.
    As Lena’s eyes moved to Higgins all puffed up in his pinstripe suit—his weak, pudgy face and a haircut that looked over processed and more like a do—it suddenly occurred to her what was going on.
    All three of them were running away. Greg Vaughan would be left behind to sit on the hot seat. Higgins had picked his rival in the office to handle the case because he knew that it would destroy whoever sat in the chair.
    No one prosecuting the father of a murdered girl would ever have a political future in Los Angeles.
    Higgins had picked Vaughan, not to save the office, but to save himself and possibly even his protégés: Steven Bennett and Debi Watson. Vaughan’s face would be attached to the prosecution of Tim Hight, a father who sought justice for his only child, rather than the prosecutors who had blown the trial, or the district attorney who claimed to have overseen them.
    The move was ice-cold and vicious. As Lena looked Higgins over, she wondered if he hadn’t worked out the details with his political consultants last night. It had seemed more than odd to her that he hadn’t shown up at the crime scene. Especially when one

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